
A septic tank is an underground settlement chamber that separates solid waste from liquid effluent. Solids settle to the bottom of the tank and are broken down by anaerobic bacteria, while partially treated liquid flows out to a drainage field (soakaway) for final treatment in the soil. Septic tanks are suitable for properties on permeable ground with sufficient space for a compliant drainage field.
Since January 2020, septic tanks in England are no longer permitted to discharge directly to a watercourse. If your existing tank discharges to a stream, ditch, or river, it must be replaced with a sewage treatment plant or upgraded with a compliant drainage field. DrainsCo advises on the most cost-effective route to compliance.
A sewage treatment plant (also called a package treatment plant) provides a higher level of effluent treatment than a septic tank. These systems use aeration and biological processes to produce a final effluent clean enough to discharge directly to a watercourse under the Environment Agency’s General Binding Rules — without requiring a drainage field.
DrainsCo installs treatment plants from leading manufacturers. Treatment plants are the recommended solution for properties with impermeable ground, limited space, high water tables, or where a drainage field is not viable.


A cesspit is a sealed, watertight tank with no outlet. All waste is stored and must be emptied regularly by a licensed tanker. Cesspits are a last-resort solution where neither a septic tank nor a treatment plant is feasible due to ground or space constraints. DrainsCo installs cesspits to the required standards but will always explore alternatives first due to the ongoing operational costs.
Most septic tank installations require a drainage field (also known as a soakaway or infiltration system) to disperse treated effluent into the ground. DrainsCo carries out percolation testing to assess your soil’s absorption rate, designs the drainage field to BS 6297 standards, and installs the full system with inspection access points for future maintenance.


Off-mains drainage in England is governed by a combination of Environment Agency General Binding Rules, Building Regulations Approved Document H, and the Environmental Permitting Regulations. DrainsCo designs every installation to satisfy all applicable requirements:
A standard domestic septic tank installation typically costs between £3,000 and £8,000 including the tank, drainage field, excavation, and Building Control fees. Sewage treatment plants generally cost £5,000 to £12,000+ installed. Costs vary based on ground conditions, tank size, and site access. DrainsCo provides a fixed-price quote after the site survey and percolation testing.
A percolation test (also called a porosity test or perc test) measures how quickly water drains through your soil. The results determine whether a drainage field is viable and, if so, what size it needs to be. DrainsCo carries out percolation testing as part of every septic tank site survey, following the methodology in BRE Digest 365 and BS 6297.